1 / 38

Informix and DB2 an SQL Perspective

Informix and DB2 an SQL Perspective. Informix and DB2 SQL. Bob Carts Senior Data Engineer, SAIC robert.m.carts@saic.com. Keith Gibert Software Engineer, SAIC myron.k.gibert.sr@saic.com. Our Story – How We Spent our Summer Vacation. We were told to convert to DB2 version 8.1

pantojaj
Download Presentation

Informix and DB2 an SQL Perspective

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Informix and DB2 an SQL Perspective

  2. Informix and DB2 SQL Bob Carts Senior Data Engineer, SAIC robert.m.carts@saic.com Keith Gibert Software Engineer, SAIC myron.k.gibert.sr@saic.com

  3. Our Story – How We Spent our Summer Vacation • We were told to convert to DB2 version 8.1 • No DB2 Experience or Training • Data Warehouse Application • 900 GB of data • Using Informix XPS version 8.31 • 684 pieces of ETL code • ETL code SQL, KSH, PERL • No stored procedures or triggers

  4. Introduction • Certified Informix DBA (Bob) • Certified DB2 DBA (Bob) • WAIUG Board of Directors (Bob) • Work for SAIC (Science Applications International Corporation) • Windows and UNIX (Solaris, IBM AIX, HP-UX) • IDS 7.31, 9.21, 9.3, XPS 8.31, DB2 8.1 • Data Warehouse and OLTP Applications

  5. Scope of Presentation • Goal: To provide basic information on differences between Informix and DB2 SQL to help you get started in evaluating, planning or executing a conversion • Assumption: • You are familiar with Informix, dbaccess, SQL • Included: • Some basic SQL differences • Not Included: • DBA Stuff, Internals,Embedded SQL, Triggers and Stored Procedures

  6. Some Things We Learned - Support • Make friends with DB2 Developers in Toronto because the DB2 help desk does not answer SQL questions • DB2 SQL assistance is available for $ • Informix Help Desk Does answer SQL questions

  7. Some Things We Learned – Documentation • DB2 documentation is on par or better than Informix documentation (and Informix documentation is pretty good!) • Improvements to the documentation are in the works (adding examples) • Look at IBM.com, DB2 Technical Support, Product Manuals • The manuals we use most: • SQL reference Volumes 1 and 2 • Data Movement Utilities Guide and Reference

  8. Some Things We Learned – Monitoring • Informix “onstat” commands make for easy monitoring • While monitoring tools are available in DB2, they can be awkward • Onstat type monitoring commands are on the list to be added to DB2 in a future release

  9. Some Things We Learned – Monitoring • Determine which processes are running: • INFORMIX: Onstat –g ses/sql/act/ath • DB2: list applications show detail • View a specific process: • INFORMIX: onstat –g ses <PID> • DB2: get snapshot for application agentid <PID> • Kill a process: • INFORMIX: onmode –z <PID> • DB2: force application ‘(PID)’ or force application all

  10. Some Things We Learned – Monitoring • Veiw the database configuration: • INFORMIX: onstat –c • DB2: get database configuration and/or get database managers configuration (get db cfg / get db mgr cfg) • View available tablespace: • INFORMIX: onstat –d/-D/-t/-T • DB2: list tablespace show detail

  11. Interactive Access • DBACCESS – Psuedo GUI, Menu bar driven • DB2 CLP (command line processor) – A little clumsy, but adequate. More like sybase or oracle interface • Getting Help • Help dbaccess cntl-w • Help ? CLP Command • Connecting • Db2 initially requires an explicit connect • Informix implicitly connects when using dbaccess

  12. DB2CLP • Several ways to execute commands • db2 <command> • Example: db2 connect to mydb • You can also use interactive mode db2 –t Connect to mydb; Select col1, col2 From mytable; Quit;

  13. DB2CLP • You can execute OS commands within DB2 CLP ! Cp file1 file2 • Get a list of databases: List active databases; • Get a list of columns: List tables [for schema <schemaname>; • Get the layout of a table: Describe table <schemaname>.<tablename>;

  14. Calling from ksh Script • Dbaccess [dbname] <<EOF > stdout 2>stderror Select bla bla bla; EOF • Db2 –tvl <logfilename> <<EOF > Connect to [dbname]; Select bla bla bla EOF

  15. A few little things… • Default Permissions • Informix: Public has permissions by default • DB2: public does not • Updating Statistics (different syntax) Runstats on <schema>.<table> with distribution And indexes all shrlevel change; • Code Comments • DB2 does support the dash dash for comments • However, they need to start in column #1 of a line -- This works as a comment somecol char(3) -- this does not

  16. A few little things… • Don’t use double quotes in DB2 ! Select * from tabname where name = ‘Bob’ • DB2 does not support Directives

  17. Datatypes • DB2 does not support implicit casting • Explicitly cast all data types in expressions • Example: Create table bob.tabname (col1 integer,col2 char(10),col3 char(3))… Insert into tabname values (null, ‘bob’, null) --informix Insert into tabname values (cast(null as integer), ‘bob’, cast(null as char))

  18. Limiting Number of Rows Returned/ Optimize for Number of Rows • Informix: Select first 100 ssn from people; DB2: Select ssn from people Fetch first 100 rows only; • Optimize for a particular number of rows (db2 only) Db2: Select ssn from people Optimize for 20 rows;

  19. Join Syntax • DB2 Outer join syntax is different than Informix • DB2 is reportedly ANSI standard and Informix is not

  20. Join Syntax INFORMIX: Select a.name, a.employ_num, b.program, c.ed_level From employee a, training b, OUTER education c Where a.employ_num = b.employ_num and a.employ_num = c.employ_num and b.program = ‘DB2101’ DB2: Select a.name, a.employ_num, b.program, c.ed_level From employee a INNER JOIN training b on a.employ_num = b.employ_num LEFT OUTER JOIN education c on a.employ_num = c.employ_num Where b.program = ‘DB2101’

  21. Group by • Can’t use “number” syntax Group by 1,2,3…. • Forced to make case statements, etc redundant

  22. Group by - INFORMIX Select gender, state_of_birth, Case when age > 19 and age < 31 then ‘Young’ when age > 30 and age < 46 then ‘middle aged’ when age > 46 then ‘Up there’ End category From employee Group by 1,2,3

  23. Group by – DB2 Select gender, state_of_birth, Case when age > 19 and age < 31 then ‘Young’ when age > 30 and age < 46 then ‘middle aged’ when age > 46 then ‘Up there’ End case From employee Group by gender, state_of_birth, Case when age > 19 and age < 31 then ‘Young’ when age > 30 and age < 46 then ‘middle aged’ when age > 46 then ‘Up there’ End case

  24. Having • Syntax available in DB2 and not Informix • Look for duplicate keys select * from people_table where ssn in (select ssn from people_table group by ssn having count(*) > 1 );

  25. Alter Statements • Alter capabilities are limited in DB2 • Can’t drop a column • Can’t change a datatype for a column • We of course used the alter – drop in our Informix Code!

  26. UnLogged Tables • Using Unlogged databases in Informix is straight forward • Using Unlogged tables in db2 version 7.2 is • Awkward • Temporary • Dangerous • Still Possible • Db2 version 8.1 is less disastrous • Basic problem is auto rollback makes table permanently unavailable, must recreate or restore

  27. UnLogged Tables • When creating a table must specify that logging can be turned off Create table bob.xyz (Col1 char(2)) In tablespace123 index in indexspace456 Not logged initially; • Must alter the table to temporarily turn logging off Update command options using c off; Alter table bob.xyz activate not logged initially; Insert into bob.xyz … Commit; • If anything goes wrong, boom no useable table!

  28. Utilities • DB2 has import, export, load utilities • Load is fastest way to get data into table • Load can handle various delimiters or no delimiters • You can replace or insert (append) • Terminate or restart • Example: Load from /pathname/filename Of del modified by coldel| keepblanks anyorder Messages messagefile.msg Temp files path /large_directory Replace into bob.xyz;

  29. Utilities • Another load example: load from strip.txt OF ASC METHOD L (1 7,9 43,45 54,56 90,92 126,128 145, 147 148,150 160,268 277,336 336) messages messagefile.msg tempfiles path $WORKDIR replace INTO bob.xyz NONRECOVERABLE; • Import is slow

  30. Utilities • Export has several differences from dbexport • By default numbers have a + and leading zeros • Character data is enclosed by double quotes • Character data is padded to full length • Example: Export to filename.out Of del modified by coldel| decplusblank Select date_provided, rtrim(record_id) from tabname; • Used sed to strip out quotes and leading zeros

  31. Utilities • Getting the ddl • Informix: dbschema Dbschema –d databasename outputfilename.out • DB2: db2look Db2look –d databasename –e > outputfilename.out • Both have many options • Both have usage built in, just type command

  32. Error Messages • Both databases allow retrieval of error messages from the command line • INFORMIX: finderr -217 • DB2: db2 ? SQL0203

  33. Error Messages - INFORMIX -217 Column column-name not found in any table in the query (or SLV is undefined). The name appears in the select list or WHERE clause of this query but is not defined in a table and does not appear as a statement local variable (SLV) definition. Check that the column name or SLV name and the names of the selected tables are spelled as you intended. If all names are spelled correctly, you are not using the right tables, the database has been changed, or you have not defined the SLV. If the name not found is a reference to a column, that column might have been renamed or dropped. If the name not found represents an SLV and you defined the SLV in the statement, make sure that the SLV definition appears before all other references to that SLV name. This error message can also appear during the execution of an ALTER TABLE statement when the engine tries to update views that depend on the table.

  34. Error Messages – DB2 SQL0203NA reference to column "<name>" is ambiguous. Explanation:The column "<name>" is used in the statement and there is more than one possible column to which it could refer. This could be the result of: two tables specified in a FROM clause that have columns with the same name the ORDER BY clause refers to a name that applies to more than one column in the select list a reference to a column from the subject table in a CREATE TRIGGER statement does not use the correlation name to indicate if it refers to the old or new transition variable. The column name needs further information to establish which of the possible table columns it is. The statement cannot be processed. User Response:Add a qualifier to the column name. The qualifier is the table name or correlation name. A column may need to be renamed in the select list. sqlcode: -203 sqlstate: 42702

  35. INFORMIX XPS (Version 8.x) • DB2 does not have the external table feature, must up import, export and load utilities • DB2 requires explicit indexes to perform adequately • DB2 does not have the join update/batch update feature (a subselect must be used) • DB2 does not support truncate command

  36. Support Documentation Monitoring Interactive access Calling from ksh Default permissions Update Statistics Code comments Double quotes Directives Datatypes Limiting rows returned Join Syntax Group by Having Alter statements Unlogged tables Utilities Error messages XPS differences Resources Summary

  37. Resources • Db2 administration guide (book) • http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/db2/ • Online tutorials geared for certification testing • Porting Resources • Bunch of other items

  38. Contact • Contact robert.m.carts@saic.com, myron.k.gibert.sr@saic.com Presentation will be placed on WAIUG site: www.iiug.org/~waiug

More Related